It seems kind of unfair, doesn't it? First, developers have to understand and accommodate users' habits. Then we have to deliver solutions that add value while surreptitiously encouraging users to adopt better habits. Finally, we have to bring to the surface, examine, and modify our own deeply-ingrained habits. That's a painful and psychologically hard thing to do. But happy users are not the only reward. The habit of breaking habits will serve you well. [Full story at InfoWorld.com][via Jon's Radio]
About this entry:
Author: Kingsley Uyi Idehen Published: 05/15/2003 15:52 GMT-0500 Modified: 06/22/2006 08:56 GMT-0500 Comment Status: 0 Comments Permalink: http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/294
This document is empty and basically useless. It is generated by a web service that can make some statements in HTML+Microdata format. This time the service made zero such statements, sorry.